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SUDAN: Government
allows UN to assess proposed Darfur mission
May 26, 2006 -(IRIN) A joint United
Nations-African Union assessment team will head to Sudan’s
troubled Darfur region to determine how to strengthen the current
AU mission in Sudan (AMIS) and to lay the groundwork for a possible
transition to a UN peacekeeping force, a UN diplomat said.
UN Special Envoy Lakhdar Brahimi and Assistant Secretary-General
for Peacekeeping Operations Hédi Annabi concluded their talks
on the strengthening of the AU and UN peacekeeping forces on Thursday
evening, following days of wide-ranging consultations with Sudanese
senior government officials.
"We agreed that in the coming days the United Nations and the
African Union will send a joint assessment mission to Sudan,"
Brahimi told reporters in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum. "It
will then proceed to Darfur to assess the additional needs of AMIS,
which must be immediately strengthened, since it will have the initial
responsibility of facilitating the implementation of the Darfur
Peace Agreement.
The Sudanese government and the main Darfur rebel group, Minni Minnawi’s
faction of the Sudan Liberation Army, signed the agreement on 5
May. Two other rebel factions refused to sign, however, saying it
did not meet their basic demands, and the security situation on
the ground remains volatile.
On 16 May, the UN Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution
that called for an assessment team to be deployed to Darfur within
a week, but the Sudanese government was reluctant, initially, to
grant access to the team.
On Wednesday, Ahmed Ibrahim Al-Tahir, the speaker of the National
Assembly, told reporters he rejected the deployment of an international
force in Darfur under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, which allows
the use of force. Sudanese Foreign Minister Lam Akol, however, stated
that the government would hold further consultations with the UN
and the AU regarding the mandate and size of a possible UN force
in Darfur.
The intention of the UN was to help the Sudanese government and
the people of Darfur successfully implement the agreement by using
all the resources at its disposal, Brahimi stressed. This would
mean adding, as an extension of the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS)
in South Sudan, a multidimensional presence in Darfur, including
humanitarian assistance, human rights observers and support for
voluntary returns and longer-term recovery, as well as security,
he said.
Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan,
told reporters in New York that the agreement was an important step
towards an eventual transition to a UN force in Darfur. The timeframe
for its deployment to a large extent depended on member states’
willingness to commit troops and logistical support. "What
will shorten the timeframe for deployment of the force would be
how quickly member states which have the capabilities will be willing
to share them with us," he said.
Meanwhile, in his latest report on Darfur to the Security Council
- made public on Thursday - Kofi Annan said civilians continued
to suffer the consequences of persistent violence and insecurity,
with new displacement of populations and high levels of sexual and
gender-based violence. "As the conflict has become increasingly
erratic and fragmented, civilians have become more exposed to attacks
and abuse, and the population’s need for protection more acute,"
the report said.
Annan said that despite the peace deliberations, "all parties
continued to engage in totally unacceptable levels of violence and
despicable attacks against civilians in breach of humanitarian law
and earlier ceasefire commitments." He said a firsthand technical
assessment of the situation on the ground was "urgently required".
From: http://irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=53551&SelectRegion=East_Africa&SelectCountry=SUDAN
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